The findings and conclusions in these presentations have not been formally disseminated by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and should not be construed to represent any agency determination or policy.

Wednesday, March 12, 2008
P56

What Does a Healthy Penis, Talking Dogs and SexINFO Text Messaging All Have In Common: Innovative Social Marketing Strategies

Jacqueline McCright1, Jeffrey Klausner1, Frank V. Strona2, Alonzo Gallaread3, Deborah K. Levine4, Les Pappas5, and Mikael Wagner6. (1) STD Prevention and Control Services, San Francisco Department of Public Health, 1360 Mission St, Suite 401, San Francisco, CA, USA, (2) STD Prevention & Control Services, San Francisco Department Of Public Health, 1360 Mission St, Suite 401, San Francisco, CA, USA, (3) STD Prevention & Control Services, San Francisco Department of Health, 1360 Mission St, Suite 401, San Francisco, CA, USA, (4) Internet Sexuality Information Services, Inc, P.O. Box 14287, San Francisco, CA, USA, (5) Better World Advertising, San Francisco, CA, USA, (6) Promotions West, San Franciso, CA


Background:
As the rates of HIV and other STDs continue to disproportionately affect gay and bisexual men, African American adolescents in San Francisco, traditional HIV/STD intervention efforts must be challenged. It is essential that public health programs raise the awareness and importance of testing and treatment for syphilis, chlamydia and gonorrhea. Innovative strategies and messages are necessary to reach specific audiences in an effective manner.

Objective:
To describe the process of a local public health department launching and marketing innovative STD/HIV awareness social marketing campaigns in collaboration with the social marketing agency.

Method:
These campaigns utilize a sex positive approach through a community-based participatory process; needs assessment data; a creative social marketing and public health team; dedicated street outreach staff; and advertising placement and marketing collateral.

Result:
We developed three innovative campaigns that were marketed in very distinct areas of San Francisco to address the rise in syphilis among gay and bisexual men and the health disparities of chlamydia and gonorrhea among African American adolescents. A successful cartoon penis, named Healthy Penis was developed to spread the word about syphilis testing; Dogs Are Talking campaign features dogs of various breeds as spokes models to encourage their guardians to maintain their sexual health and SexINFO – the first sexual health information text messaging service in the United States, which provides 11 options for teens to access health information and referrals in SF directly to their cell phone by texting the word SexINFO, and 61827, request the information needed, get the information texted back to their phone within a few minutes.

Conclusion:
Social marketing campaigns can be launched and marketed effectively through a collaborative process of public health experts, a social marketing team and engagement with community partners.

Implications:
A multi-component marketing strategy is essential to reach the target audience in an effective manner.